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4 th Annual Right Care Initiative Clinical Quality Improvement Summit October 3, 2011

Right Care. Initiative. 4 th Annual Right Care Initiative Clinical Quality Improvement Summit October 3, 2011. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations. Right Care. Initiative. Hector P. Rodriguez, PhD, MPH

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4 th Annual Right Care Initiative Clinical Quality Improvement Summit October 3, 2011

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  1. Right Care Initiative 4th Annual Right Care Initiative Clinical Quality Improvement Summit October 3, 2011

  2. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Hector P. Rodriguez, PhD, MPH Associate Professor of Health Policy and Management Associate Director, UCLA Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Equity UCLA School of Public Health hrod@ucla.edu

  3. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Today’s Goals Discuss important trends in the safety net and priorities in delivery systems research for vulnerable populations 2. Describea UCLA/RAND ARRA study comparing the effectiveness of delivery system interventions in California community clinics and health centers.

  4. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Nearly Half of Hispanics and One of FourAfrican Americans Were Uninsured for All or Part of 2009 49* 28 26 21 18 Percent of adults 18–64 * Compared with whites, differences remain statistically significant after adjusting for income. Source: Commonwealth Fund 2009 Health Care Quality Survey.

  5. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Federal Health Center Growth Initiative • Dedicated federal funds for a five-year (2002-2006) expansion to serve 6.1 million additional patients, ACA continues expansion • Funded over 1,500 new or expanded health sites. • Number of patients receiving mental health care increased 190% from 2001-2005

  6. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Growth of Community Health Centers: 1970-2005 Patients (in millions)

  7. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative 2008: Congress doubles AHRQ’sEffective Health Care Program’sbudget to $30 million. 2009: TheAmerican Recovery and Reinvestment Actof 2009 (ARRA) provided additional funding, in the amount of $300 million, for comparative effectiveness research 2010: Prioritiesfor comparative effectiveness research on delivery systems identified: 1) Redesigning care Delivery, 2) Redesigning payment.

  8. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative To identify which system processes, structures, or strategies are most effective for improving outcomes for diverse patient populations and to use such evidence as the basis for formulating policy to shift care to value-maximizing optionsin systems carrying for high proportions of racial, ethnic, and linguistic minorities.

  9. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Whya focus on delivery systems research? It can take nearly 17 years to turn what is reported in the medical literature into the delivery system. DSR aims to facilitate the integrationofevidence-based structures and processes into the delivery system. Most large scale organizational changes continue to fail. Comparative effectiveness research to understand the relative value of health care interventions

  10. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative The Challenge of Diabetes Care Management Uncontrolled diabetes can result in high-cost complications, contributing substantially to high health care expenditures in the United States. Recent research has demonstrated the effectiveness of multidisciplinary primary care team interventionsin improving chronic illness care quality and patient self-management. The broad uptake of approaches for improving diabetes care quality is not financially feasible for most community clinics and health centers (CCHCs) that serve vulnerable patient populations.

  11. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Source: Rodriguez, Chen, and Rodriguez, A National Study of Problematic Care Experiences among Latinos with Diabetes, Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, 2010.

  12. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative • Latinos more likely than non-Latino Whites to receive suboptimal treatment • Clinical Care Processes: HbA1c, lipid screening (Mainous et. al, 2007; Nwasuruba et. al, 2009) • Care Outcomes:Glycemic, cholesterol and blood pressure control (Heisler et. al, 2007) • Low quality care and suboptimal treatment adherence an result in high-cost and challenging complications (Harris et. al, 2008; Karter et. al, 2002)

  13. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Source: Rodriguez, Chen, and Rodriguez, A National Study of Problematic Care Experiences among Latinos with Diabetes, Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved, 2010.

  14. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative • Aim 1: To compare the effectiveness of 1) office-based medical assistant panel managers and 2) community-based health workers in improving diabetes care quality, patient self-management, and patients’ experiences of primary care. • Aim 2: To compare the effectiveness of the strategies in reducing racial and ethnic disparities in diabetes care quality. • Aim 3:To clarifythe most important organizational facilitators and barriers to the effective integration of the strategies into routine care.

  15. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative

  16. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative

  17. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Organizational Readiness to Change Strength and extent of evidence of QI intervention Quality of organizational context Capacity of internal facilitation of QI Care Team Functioning Communication Role clarify Relational coordination Psychological safety Clinic Structural Capabilities Patient assistance & reminders Electronic health records Culture of quality Enhanced access Clinic human resources Other practice characteristics Implementation of new staff role to support improvements in the quality of diabetes care Improvements in Diabetes Care HbA1c Control LDL Control Patient Self-Management Patients’ Experiences of Care

  18. iCARE Project Milestones

  19. Intervention invitation criteria: • Diabetes registry operational since 1/10 (to reduce likelihood of major data quality issues) or electronic health record. • Site participation in Clinician/Staff Survey (n=35) Assignment to the Interventions or Control Groups Results of clinician & staff primary care team functioning survey High Readiness Moderate Readiness Low Readiness FINAL SAMPLE MA Health Coach (n=3) Community Health Worker (n=3) Control Clinics (n=10)

  20. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Diverse Range of “Care Team Functioning” across CHCs

  21. Largest Baseline Differences in Team Functioning

  22. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Diverse Range of “Change Readiness” across CHCs

  23. Largest Baseline Differences in Organizational Readiness for Change

  24. Comparing the Effectiveness of Delivery Systems for Vulnerable Populations Right Care Initiative Immediate Next Steps Ongoing medical assistant and community health worker training Intervention year starts in 2012 Baseline patient experience and self-management survey Support the consortia’s learning collaborative and refine performance feedback to clinics Key informant interviews with intervention and control clinics.

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